About The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904 | View Entire Issue (July 4, 1903)
i aEORuiA, itLY 4. woa, LOW RATES VIA ATLANTI . Air cusliiona are now manufactured which arc calculated tp add ias much to the comfort of the Individual n'u pneumatic tires luve* to the smooti* running of a machine, saysJMie Scien tific American. The cushions shown i'.* the illustration are made .of cotton duck coated .with rubber sufficient!’, thick to make the fabric air tight. Stay* LINE. Boston; Mass., National Educational Association, Jujy 2nd to 66*. 1903. The Montgomery Advertiser toys its caster intothe ring as follows: “The Thomasrille Times-Enterprise evidently has a serious case on liand. Hear it chortle: .. *.. . ‘ ^ \ “A woman's smile may have in it more sublimity than a sunset, more pathos than tears, more warmth than the sun shine, more love than a Laura Jean Lib- bey novel and more deviltry than Satan could devise in two months. : ' “We don’t knowwhetherthe editor is married or not. . If he is his wife will do well fco muzzle liim, and if he isn’t some girljieedfl to take him in band.’* The Advertiser’s contemporaries af fectionately call it- “Grandma.” For Granny’s benefit we would 'state that we are not married and* that any girl can take ns in hand who will promise not to muzzle ns after thejrital words are said. Via all rail or via rail-t-Sonnd Lines, rne fare pins $2.00 for tlie round trip. Tickets to he sold July 2nd to the , 6th inclusive, good leaving Boston Until July I2tli, twenty-five cents’to he paid for execution of return portion of ticket. Note—By personally depositing ticket with Joint Agent not earlier than July Tth, norlaterthan July 11th, 1903, and upon payment of fifty cents, extension can be secured to leave Boston any; day up to September 1st, 1903. their'belief. Some alarm has been ex-. ' pressed at the fear jthafc their religion may become prevalent. A few have gone so far as to say that they should » be prohibited by law from teaching their 1 beliefs. ' ^ ^ - Of course this is not practicable and is, to say the least, inconsistent in a nation 1 whose Christian emissaries are busy spreading th e gospel in all lands. ' 1 As a matter of course, the Buddhist belief is bound to gain some adherents. 1 New rellgionsbioesora in America’s soil. Spiritualism, Mormonism, Zionism, and Christian Science, all inorease and flottr- ’ ish- ahd the number of the sects is as the 1 sands of the sea. Believers in Christianity need have no 1 fear. “Truth is mighty and must pre vail.” Tlie religion of Jesus Christ is broad, enough, and strong enough imd true enough to view fromits everlasting strongholds in the sonls of mankind the . ris6 and fall c.f fhousafids of these eph emeral faddish creeds. / V, „• / Buddhism, however, is believed in by | millions of the earth’s people and is by no means a bad sort of religion. The following doctrities, promulgated ‘600 years before tUe coming of ;Ohris0 are the ten commandments of the Budd hist religion. **If they were iived s tCj? to by all of Us, the world would be a better place:!. ' • ; 'V “Ball not, but have regard for life. “Steal not-, neither do ye rob, but help everybody to be master of the fruits of rhis labor. . . 1 ' “Abstain from all impurity, and lead a life of chastity, v - “Lie'not, but be truthful, and speak, the truth with discretion, not so as todo harm, but with a loving heart and wise- A vegetable liquid for governing « equalizing the flow of women’s menses which occur once in every lunar month. BRA I) FI ELD'S Female Regulator is thb essential quality of pomtul herbs. It is a concentrated essence bcst adapted for women’s delicate organism, and putis such .form that it is always properh assimilated and taken into the system. Stoppages, suppression, -painful or othei irrqpuamy of the menses and sickly flow? are cOrrected and cured hy the regulai BALTIMORE, MD. ANNUAL MEETING OP GRAND LObOE ET- NEVOLENT PROTECTIVE ORDER ELKS, july; 2Ist to 23rd, 1903. .One first-class fare plus $2.00 (via all rail routes) for the round trip/ Tickfete) will be on sale July 19th and 20thy with return limit t<T July 25th, except that upon payment of-fl.OO in.addition to fee pf twenty-five cfcnte far validation for return portion of ticket, limit - will ~ b& extended to leave Baltimore not later than Jnly 3lst, 1903. Ant CUSHION POR A CTO MOBILES * axe placed on the inside at. regular in tvrvais for the purpose of holding the cushion iu proper shape when inflated The cushions, have outer coverings of corduroy, leather, duck; etc., according to fancy. 'Lheir Wcks, sides and seati» are smooth arid have no ridges or but tons to render' them- uncomfortable. Having no hollow^, they do not hold the dust and being made oif rubber are proof against dampness; \ S Automobile Stopping: Device. Charles A. Lieb of .New York has in : . vented and patented a guard for auto mobiles,. which when struck In colli sion or by an outsider automatically shuts off the "power, be K electricity, gasoline or steam, and puts on a band brake on the rear wheel. Mr- Lieb’s creation consists, says the New York Herald, of a guard or fender of bicycle tubing projecting in front of the auto mobile from a point on a line with the floor of the. body, having its sides curv ing downward. The 'guard irf kep{ up by a spring. When struck in collision or knocked down by a ppliceman’s drib or other weapon; a crank arm is reversed. Rods connect this crank arm w^th the motor and also with a" bandt brake nn the rear axle: The reversal of the crank Mints off power from the former And applies the latter. \ Oar Automobile Consumption. There are about 30,000 automobiles ta use in the United States. Menstruation, qr periodie flowt, neces sitate a breaking down of cells lining th< mucous metribrarie and d reconstruction after every sickness, which is accompa nied with marked congestion and loss oi blood. Such changes are very apt to pro duce chronic catarrh. Leucorrhea oi Whites is the result of these irritating dis charges. Regulator cures these trouble* and restores to perfect: health the patient who suffered the debilitating losses. Buy of druggists. |:.oo per bottle. Our illustrated book mailed free, “ Perfect Heath for. Women.” nt£ BBADF1ELD REGULATOR CO* Atlanta, Ga SPECIAL RATES 4TH OF JULY. ■ One and third fare, for round trip,; tickets sold Jnly 2nd, 3rd and 4th, good to return on all trains up to including July 8th. ... . Foi* full information sob Ticket Agent or address ' T. J. Bottoms. T. P. A., Thomasville, Ga., or-W. H.-Leahy. D. P. A., Savan nah, Ga., or W. J. Craig, G. P. A., Wilmington, N#C. dwtf That. new.- discovery for lock-jaw will come in good play if we have to talk much more about Karageorgevi toll. 1 One of the oft propounded questions of the*sweet girl graduate during the month of sunshine and roses now draw ing to a close lies been, “whither are we I The approved greeting in Atlanta: •Good morning!. How's your bill get ting along? u r drifting?” Chaitg^of Firm. \ Irinouneement has been "made of. a change of firm by which Capt. E. T). Whittaker becomes sole proprietor of the Kentucky "stables. Mr. R. P. Doss, who has'been associated with him. has sold his interest to the Captain. A Swiss mechanic has invented an au tomatic cradle rocker. Of course it .will rale the world. when it comes to a question qf food fads, girlie. A perusal of the advertisements of. the newspapers and magazines of the day informs -ns that the propel things to eat afe Uneeia Bale-o’-hay, Eata- Heap-a-Oats, and other compounds. The prize idea in all these appears to be that they are ready prepared, ■ pre- diges- A POWERFUL WHEEL. lave||tor Wonli .Use Radium to Pm. fel New Air Ship to The Electrical World publishes the following remarkable communication: The" writer is a poor inventor who has worked for years on a wheel, and .only recent discoveries in the scientific invention of today have enabled him to gel power out of it to frin a special kind ef motor. It is no humbug, you can rest assured, but''I cannot give away, the secret of the detail parts unless Gome otfeoc inventor gobbles it up ‘and claims it with some little im provement as bis own idea. It is a magnetic wheel that will run of itself undated by wind at the. srinjd; time. 'ilils. wbecl would run' for years or until It clogged up with off/ It would have power enough to run two fan wheels to propel a twenty foot airship at thenrete of about 100 miles an hour, perhaps more, 'but. not ngaifist the wind. The air ship would be the shape of h gunflsb almost and feather to the wind and point upward. It would be built in six sections of aluminium, glass and mica. The wheel has a hollow rim and spokes, has. drop magnets Inside and a wrought iron ball; also a small quanti ty of radium. ’ The dropping and rate* ,tng of the magnets cause, the wheel to fevolye. (we do not .propose‘tq give the secret details). The spokes of the wheel ate feathered with a wind, fan that will cariso^.the wheel to revolve also; but we ,do not depend on that! but’ on the magneto and the.bali und the radfnm.^ price set. the wheel has got to revolve and In turn gives off electro magnetic power to two small motors that mn. the fan wheels. This wheel was first Invented in 187ft, but- had no power until two inventions recently discovered came ont. Now the power Is at hand. Radium is one that makes If work and keeps it work ing over and over, again. Once on the move, the wheel .Cannot stop of itself. This wheel would send a twenty foot air ship to another planet It can bo done now. Probably Postmaster General Payne would like to initiate Tom Sawyer and kna out his whitewashing job to some one else. f.<.H CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYALPHIS ted and need only to be swallow to make, a new creature of one v We must earn estly 'protest with, voice' and;.-appetite against this invasion of the practical and ulterior into culinary art. People should not live to eat, but they should eat to enjoy themselves* as well as to merely live. , Why were we provided with a palate unless it is to be tickled, a sense of caste unless it is to be pleased, and an infinite variety offood unless it into be enjoyed? Tlie mouth" was made for osculation as well as' mastication. Let ns preserve the romance of the breakfast table. Human feeings are the creritures of circumstance at best: A crip of cold cbffee for breakfast often makes a mania mind the deVel’s workshop for-a whole day.. Therefore let us have food that attracts the eye, rind pleases tire palate. If this is done toe pessimist’s wail of “Nothing to'eat but food”.wiltdie away in the dim distance, and in its stead will arise tlie non-sad requiem of the friddy food. • V - 7 * That gubernatorial bee buzzes busily around the law offices .of Gudrry and Hall. In fact -ft seems to have he^ quarters there. Now comes a solon who wants to tax divproes to help out the school fund. He las an answer to the old question, “Gan any good come outONazareth?” “Invent riot evil reports, neither do ye repeat them.. Carp not, but look for the good.ades of jour fellow-beings, so that you, may with sincerity defend them against their enemies. “Swear not, but speak decently and with dignity. r “Waste not the time with empty words, but speak to the purpose or keep silence. *’ •; "‘/J- ’ ^ - t ’> •> ; “Covet not, nor envy, but rejoice at the fortunes of otirer people.' v t ' : ■ “Cleanse your' Jteart of malice, cast ont all anger, spite and ill-will; cherish no hatred, not even against your slan derer, nor against those that do y ou harm, but embrace all living beings with kindness and benevolence . “Free your hands of ignof&nce and be anxious to,learn the truth, especially in tHe one thing tliat is needed/lest you fall a pJey either to skepticism qr to er rors. Skepticism will make you indif ferent and errors will lead you astray so that you will not find the noble path tliat leads to life eternal.” * If people must have a substitute for Christianity, Buddhism would do fairly welL A resident of Guelxna, in Algeria, has taken out a patent for the manufac ture of casks of cork wood. - An in terior coating isolates the contents from contact with the cork. A barrel of eleven gallons weighed thirty pounds instead of .eighty pounds, which is the weight of a wooden cask of the same capacity.Cork being a bed conductor of beat and cold, the ne cessity of adding alcohol for th©-preset- . cation of wine would be unnecessary, grid tbe liquid wbuld tto'ibnger be sub ject to the fluctuation of temperature. Iri warm climates these casks might be useful for conveying ice, meat fish or fruits. A great saving on the freight expense would also be. obtained, con sidering a cork, barrel weighs two- thirds less than a wooden one. The In fluence of boat cannot warp the Staves; consequently tbe hoops remain in place. Ow Coffee Import*. In round figures not less than a bil lion pounds of coffee bean are brought to this country each year:for domestic 1 consumption. Since 1894 tbe imports i^t any rate Georgia can read with equanimity of the trouble Missouri and South Carolina are having with their Beutenant governors. We haven't any. Savannah hr.* been celebrating the; bi centennial of John Wesley ’s birth. The Episcopalians and the Mqthodistfi should each have celebrated one hundred years. Nothing :ha*; ever equalled it. New Discovery The Macou Telegraph wants it to be’ understood tliat they are not advocating Cleveland "for a third te^m. Can. yon blame (hem? . • <> A Perfect For All Throat and Cure: Lung Troubles. Money back if it felts. Trial Bottles froe. A New York judge has vigorously eoudemued the practice of pistol carry ing. It seqtus that toe south is not the eu-j. Buinerjn t(iat regard. An exchange says: For clearness read Macaulay. Fotlbgio read Burke and Bacon. 1 For action read Homer and Soott. • For conciseness read Bacon and Pope. For sublimi ty of conception read Mil- have more than doubled, and the in creased consumption per capita has been more than four pounds, the pres ent average belug about fourteen and g half pounds for every man. woman rind child. A fair average retail price Is 20 cents, which makes the amount spent eadh year for the breakfast bev erage rather more than $200,000,000. Valuable Industry. A» Spain. Within the last year .an industry of much Importance to "American paint manufacturers and .dealers has sprung Into existence near Malaga, J3pain. A rich vein pf oxide of iron ore. known as hematite, valuable chiefly for the manufacture of red paint for structural GINS TWICE AS riANY ✓bales * Joe Hill Hall has announced that he will be a caud^datefor governor. Jfr, Hall could put up a Mount Pe|ee Oam- pugn that would make Tom Johnson’s antomobile and circus .tent hide tlieir heads in shame. WUM PWUIO cotton pin. It tdns Torn 5 to 7 bale, cf lon^r staple cotton n day, while tlie old style Bins hot f om 2 to- 3 bales. . Onr Kin does not take np any mote floor space than the old gins. It does not shake the house and Its motion is noiseless. One man can nm it. In a letter to Mr. L. I,. Foss, the in ventor, Mr. J. D. Strickland of Stileon. Ga, says: “With one of ybnr gins I have (tinn ed as much cotton as any three or font gins In my section. “I am pleased with the gin,' and I want yon to take my order for another to be need by me this season.’’ ■ For further particulars, price, terms, etc.. andrfti<. • For vivacity read Stevenson and Kip- QtTESTION. ANSWERED. Yes, August Flower' still has toe larg est sale of any ^ “medicine in the civilized world.- Your mothers’ and flrarimoth- era’ never thought of uaing-'anything else for Ipdigeetion or Biliousness. Doc tors were scarce and they seldom heard of Appendicitis,' Nervous Prostration or Heart failure, etc. They ,pae4' August Flower to dean out the system arid stop In (he United States court Friday Judge Speer granted an order requiring tiba railroads to show a cause.ljefpre Brae* at Mount Airy, on July 9, why! the *£rapce^qf 2c. per hundred iri freight rate* on lumber to .YloTuts beyond the .^brer is not exorbitant or iirireas- , We predict that the Pope, healthy as he is, will be degd before that Panama canal is dag. * At a recent banquet Emperor William proposed tlie toast. -Ood bleajthe Unit- ed States.” He probably thought “Meinself andGott.” '•' • v • r. Marianna is coming to the fnmt—she is to have a, real" Chinese laundry.-- Times (Wrier. ‘ Of course ^you mean the shirt front. •"*' ^ ± i If there, was. any doubt, sbpnt it being ^reat^r Georgia, the doubt lias been re moved. There’s a biU pendlug in the leg islature to regulate the speed of antomo- mobiles. \ The Cqrdele Board Education visit ed Way cross recently toget some point ers ona mode! school. We donld show them something along that line iri Thomasville. j. • ‘ Job; v ; ; For elegance read Virgil, Goldsmith, Milton and Arnold* .And we add: i For, star jfpangled folly read your own old love letters. . ironwork,' has'been developed. The production of hematite In the United States , tap jbieen . falling, off In spite of an increasing deiriand. Proirren In fRuInji. 5 The ancient, tanner paid rin.expert high wages to guess at toe contents ef his hides, when sold hy. measure.. To day an unskilled workman hands the irregular shaped pieces to a little ma- Forithe life of us we ean’t see^how a man can plow a horse ali the week on half ration^ and then iiitch the pack of bones up and drive five or six’ miles to "meetimr” on . Snndav. and whan La j something like a table “meeting’’ onSunday,' and, when .he gets there si^g “Jesus, Lover, of My Soul, Let Me to Thy Bosom Fly.” He had as well quit dnging. fqr the Loyd is not going to famish any such men with a pair of wings, says the Tatriall Jonr- Albany, Valddeta.were present arid for a while tlie bidding was spirited, •early- 20,000 pounds were on the mar r fat, arid it wair finally sold to A". Ehr- fab &i Bro., of Savannah, at 21 58-100 iriww 7?! y nr* top,,which, quicker, with a double top, which, quicker, than the mind of the expert could guess-it, reckons with exactness the square con- tents ip both the metric qnjl standard systems.; f - Charming Locations for Summer Outings. The mountains of' North Georgia arid Middle Tennessee; along the line of'tbe Westem & Atlantic Railroad arid the Nashville. Chattanooga & St; Louis Ry., offer ideal spots as health and pleasure resorts. Marietta, at the foot of Kenncf uaw Mountain; Cartersv.ille aqd Rome; among the hills of. North Georgia and on the banks of the Etowah and.Coosa Riv ers;'. Lookout Mountain, famous as a Southern Summer Resort; Monteagle and Sewanee, the great summer educa tional locations, .with Catoosa Springs, Beersheba Springs. Bon. Aqua Springs, East Brook Springs, Estill Springs, Nicholson Spnngs and many others, tempt the well informed Summer Tour ist.- ■" ■- tu •• • Thu'climate is bracing,' the waters medicinal and revivifying,-with roman tic mid varied scenery. r Write for a beautifully illustrated folder, freo, to " ‘ " t'lttniwh.’P’.'AU "• L R„ Atlanta. Ga..-; Wilson M. Hardy, THOMASVILLJ. Gs. More than nine-tenths ot the 300,000 pounds of peppermint oil enoually con sumed by tbe world is produced within ninety miles of Kalsqutsoo, Mich. thing .over $3,000. This sale of wool Od not contain that of the. growers of Cblqoitt oonnty. Tliey were somewhat behind this year in baling theirs, .and mmnot sell before about July 10. The Oolqnitt growers liare something like 4DJXO poonds for sale, and will get the Bid of of the different firms by wire on y- fheyjasfar.the.sale. The American Waterworks Associa- Bon has decided to hold Hi next oon- Tention in MSwankee in 1P04. What a slam for the product that made Milwan- . : 2 It ’ - tit ' • ., We wonder if Bearst haid in. mind that verse abont “bread cast upon the waters" when lw gajre 1(5,000 to the (Georgia Tech., There is another old saw about never looking a gift automo bile in.the. steering.ge|r. So we’ll be ttraam CtrYinr With Air ?o«la. au industry in' which pneumatic tools bid. fair to effect a revolution is the working of granite. Up till a few years ago the granite tombstones which are to be seen in every cemetery and the elaborately carved granite biockq which, are , no.w so ( popular tor ) the frerits. of banks and public houses were dressed by hand with a hammer and chisel in much the same way as we The University of Wisconsin has es- tabUshed a chair of humor, ^pd Ote merry ha ha will soon reaonnd from its classic spills, according to, Ure scientific fulas. We k^w severaiGemidale^s- iatora who could fill the chair. The nipatridtic teachers who weht to the tJdiverlsit^ 'of Tenne&ee Summer nere. ■ They Le^avS^their tfotnres Bdl.oa*. Wondertnl Record. Thomas A. Edison is nearing the 1,000 matk'in bia inventions. . Already he Has been granted 700 patents on bis Ideas by the United States government, p^t efflrettn^’f"^ yelS. P % H. F. Smith, The Klnd You I Bears the / * •! 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